Review of the MEPAG Report
on Mars Special Regions
Committee to Review the MEPAG Report on Mars Special Regions
European Science Foundation
and
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine
David H. Smith
Mars Exploration Program Analysis Group, Silver Spring, Maryland
3 March, 2016NOTE ADDED BY JPL WEBMASTER: This content has not been approved or adopted by, NASA, JPL, or the California Institute of Technology. This document is being made available for information purposes only, and any views and opinions expressed herein
do not necessarily state or reflect those of NASA, JPL, or the California Institute of Technology.
The Task
2
Parallel requests from ESA to ESF and NASA to the Academies in September/October 2014 resulted in the
establishment of a joint committee addressing the following statement of task:
An ad hoc committee under the auspices of the National Research Council and the
European Science Foundation will review the current planetary protection requirements for
Mars Special Regions and their proposed revision as outlined in the 2014 Special Regions
report of the Mars Exploration Program Analysis Group (MEPAG). The resulting report
from the review shall include recommendations for an update of the planetary protection
requirements for Mars Special Regions.
Role of the Academies and ESF
3
The planetary protection policies of both NASA and ESA, in accordance with COSPAR policy, entail that requirements
imposed on spaceflight missions be determined following receipt of independent, multidisciplinary scientific advice. After
publication of MEPAG’s SR-SAG2 report (reexamining the quantitative definition of Special Regions on Mars) an
additional and independent view was requested due to the importance of the subject and the potential severe consequences
for future Mars missions.
ESF and the Academies provide an unique interface with their respective scientific communities through their
membership organisations and can provide independent advice taking into account all relevant areas of science, including
the engineering and social sciences and the humanities.
As a consequence both NASA and ESA have established arrangements by which the Academies and ESF, respectively to
provide strategic advice on planetary protection.
The Joint Committee
4
PETRA RETTBERG, DLR, Germany, Chair
ALEXANDRE ANESIO, University of Bristol, UK
VICTOR BAKER, University of Arizona, USA
JOHN A. BAROSS, University of Washington, USA
SHERRY L. CADY, PNNL, USA
CHRISTINE M. FOREMAN, MSU, USA
ERNST HAUBER, DLR, Germany
GIAN GABRIELE ORI, Universita d’Annunzio, Italy
DAVID PEARCE, Northumbria University, UK
NILTON RENNO, University of Michigan, USA
GARY RUVKUN, Harvard Medical School, USA
BIRGIT SATTLER, University of Innsbruck, Austria
MARK P. SAUNDERS, NASA, retired, USA
DIRK WAGNER, GFZ, Geermany
FRANCES WESTALL, CNRS, France
EMMANOUIL DETSIS, European Science Foundation
DAVID H. SMITH, the Academies
How are Planetary Protection Policies Set?
5
• COSPAR Planetary Protection Policy
(COSPAR Bureau and Council-endorsed version)
• New phenomena reported/new missions proposed/other external
considerations
(Peer reviewed scientific literature/request from private or public
entity/recommendations from agency advisory groups)
• Possible study by a scientific organization and/or a COSPAR-sponsored
workshop
(May be solicited by space agencies and carried out by a National Scientific
Institution or International Scientific Unions)
• COSPAR Panel on Planetary Protection (PPP) meeting
(Panel business meeting at COSPAR Scientific Assemblies or dedicated
COSPAR Panel Colloquium, involving representatives of the scientific community
and other relevant stakeholders)
• PPP recommendation to COSPAR Bureau & COSPAR Council
Bureau and Council
yes/no to PPP
recommendations
If yes
policy is
updated
6
Mars Special Regions
2002 COSPAR defines Special Regions as zones “within which terrestrial organisms are likely to propagate, or a region
which is interpreted to have a high potential for the existence of extant martian life forms.”
2005 NASA adopts definition and commissions NRC to reexamine forward contamination policies for Mars.
2005 NRC’s “PREVCOM” report concludes that insufficient data exists to distinguish between special and non-special
regions. Recommends that all Mars be considered special until proven otherwise.
2006 MEPAG proposes a quantitative definition of Special Regions based on temperature and water activity.
2007 COSPAR colloquium discusses conclusions and recommendations of PREVCOM and MEPAG.
2010 COSPAR colloquium report conclude that sufficient data exists to distinguish special and non-special regions,
adopts a modified form of MEPAG’s quantitative definition and recommends revisit every 2 years.
2014 MEPAG reexamines prior work on Special Regions and publishes SR-SAG2 report in Astrobiology.
2015 ESF and the Academies publish their review of MEPAG’s SR-SAG2 report.
2016 Planetary protection policy revisions based on SR-SAG2 and joint report to be proposed to COSPAR
Approach and Timeline
7
Organizing Meeting, European Space Science and Technology Center, the Netherlands, October 9, 2014
Formal appointment of the joint committee, November 19, 2014
Meeting One, German Research Center for Geosciences, Potsdam, Germany, December 16 – 17, 2014
Meeting Two, Beckman Center, Irvine, USA, February 12 – 13, 2015
Final draft of the report sent to eight external reviewers in late-July 2015
Responses to reviewer comments to the Review Monitor and Coordinator for adjudication, September 1, 2015
Minor corrections and additions – public release of the report September 21, 2015
Briefing and discussion at COSPAR Planetary Protection Workshop, Bern, Switzerland, September 22-24, 2015
Printed report available, December 15, 2015
Committee authored paper derived from joint report to appear in Astrobiology, ?????, 2016
COSPAR Workshop report to be published in Advances in Space Research, ?????, 2016
Major Foci of the Joint Report
8
• The potential for terrestrial organisms to survive and proliferate on Mars
• The relationship between martian geological, hydrological, and mineralogical features and Special Regions
• Issues not falling into the two previous categories, including:
Considerations relating to human spaceflight
The utility or otherwise of maps to delineate special regions
New considerations relating to the definition of Special Regions and
Aspects of planetary protection not discussed in the SR-SAG2 report
Overview of the Findings
9
1. The SR-SAG2 report is a comprehensive review of Special Regions and the factors used to define them.
2. The committee supports 29 of SR-SAG2’s 45 specific findings, but does not support one of them.
3. The committee suggests revisions to an additional 13 findings and suggests that two more be combined.
4. The parameters used by MEPAG and COSPAR to define Special Regions are still appropriate.
5. The specific terrains currently identified as special are best regarded as “Uncertain Regions.” The
committee recommends that the final determination be made on a case by case basis as part of the landing-
site selection process.
6. The identification of Special Regions is problematic for several reasons:
Detailed knowledge of the physical and chemical conditions of the surface and sub-surface of
Mars at various scales is lacking, particularly the microscale; and
Current understanding of the ability of life to propagate is limited.
Definition of Special Regions
10
A Special Region is defined as a region within which terrestrial organisms are likely to replicate. Any region
which is interpreted to have a high potential for the existence of extant martian life forms is also defined as a
Special Region.
Given current understanding of terrestrial organisms, Special Regions are defined as areas or volumes
within which sufficient water activity AND sufficiently warm temperatures to permit replication of Earth
organisms may exist. The physical parameters delineating applicable water activity and temperature
thresholds are :
Lower limit for water activity: 0.5; Upper limit: 1.0
Lower limit for temperature: -25C; No upper limit defined
Timescale within which limits can be identified: 500 years
Delineating Special Regions
11
Observed features for which there is a significant (but still unknown) probability of association with liquid
water, and which should be considered as Uncertain Regions and treated as Special Regions until proven
otherwise:
Sources of methane (if located)
Recurring slope lineae
Gullies, and bright streaks associated with gullies
Pasted-on terrains
Caves, subsurface cavities and subsurface below 5 meters
Others, to be determined, including dark slope streaks, possible geothermal sites, fresh craters with
hydrothermal activity, modern outflow channels, or sites of recent seismic activity
Spacecraft-induced special regions are to be evaluated, consistent with these limits and features, on a case-
by-case basis. Organizations proposing to investigate any region that may meet the criteria above, have the
responsibility to demonstrate, based on the latest scientific evidence and mission approach, whether or not
their proposed landing sites are or are not Special Regions.
The Known Unknowns
12
Both SR-SAG2 and the joint committee identified a number of critical issues for which answers are not
currently known. These known unknowns include the following:
Can an organism replicate if it only has access to water vapour and not liquid water?
Is replication possible if water activity (aw) and temperature (Tc) exceed critical values asynchronously?
Have experiments to determine lower temperature limit for replication been conducted on sufficiently
long timescales to study extremely slow-growing microorganisms?
Can a single terrestrial organism propagate on Mars even if aw and Tc are appropriate?
Do multispecies colonies have an enhanced ability to proliferate in extreme conditions?
Do physical and chemical conditions in microenvironments mirror those of macroenvironment?
Outcome of SR-SAG2 and Joint Committee I
13
A draft report summarizing the discussions at the Bern Planetary Protection Workshop was
assembled and sent to workshop participants (and members of the joint committee) for comment.
After vigorous and prolonged discussion via email (near-) consensus was achieved.
The consensus report contains a series of recommendations for changes to COSPAR policy
concerning Special Regions.
Recommendations to be discussed during the PPP sessions and the Bureau and Council meetings in
Istanbul this Summer.
Outcome of SR-SAG2 and Joint Committee II
14
The official response to the joint study from the AA for NASA/SMD was received on 1 March, 2016 and
made the following points:
“We recognize that organizations proposing to investigate any region of Mars have the responsibility to
demonstrate, based on the latest scientific evidence, whether or not they will be operating within Special
Regions.”
“Our next landed mission, Mars 2020, is currently performing a detailed evaluation of the potential for
Special Regions as part of their landing site selection process for just this reason.”
“Additionally, we will be reviewing our experiences at Gale Crater to better understand ground truth at
previous lander locations.”